System Initiative (SI) today made available in private beta a platform that creates simulations of IT environments. The platform leverages a built-in framework to generate the code needed to update an application environment.
Fresh from raising $18 million in funding, SI CEO Adam Jacob said the ultimate goal is to provide a level of abstraction for DevOps environment that eliminates much of the complexity that creates bottlenecks in DevOps workflows.
For all intents and purposes, DevOps is fundamentally broken; there are too many manual processes that need to be performed, he added. The SI platform represents an ambitious effort to reimagine how DevOps processes are constructed and maintained, said Jacob.
At the core of that effort are models of IT environments created by the SI platform that are accessed via visual interface. The automation framework built into the platform then uses the relationships between models to infer configuration dynamically and then automatically generate TypeScript code that a DevOps team can apply to automate a task.
Feedback loops are also provided in real time to provide insight into the viability of a configuration and eliminate the need for no state files to track and no ‘plan’ versus ‘apply’ stages.
As more organizations realize how dependent they are on software to drive digital processes, many of them are looking to improve the productivity of developers and the DevOps teams that support them. After a wave of initial progress, many DevOps teams find themselves supporting DevOps workflows using custom code that varies widely in quality. SI is making a case for a digital twin platform that generates a set of code that can be applied more consistently, rather than relying on a DevOps engineer to write code.
Ultimately, the goal is to launch a new DevOps era to eliminate most of the silos that slow down application development and deployment, noted Jacob. In fact, one of the reasons few organizations today fully automated DevOps across the application development and deployment process is that it’s simply too difficult to achieve using legacy tools and DevOps platforms, he added.
A recent survey conducted by the Continuous Delivery Foundation (CDF), for example, found only 22% of respondents are using CI and CD approaches to automate all building, testing and deployment of code in a production environment. Instead, many organizations are using a combination of DevOps and waterfall processes to manage application development and deployment.
It’s not clear how many organizations are willing to fundamentally change the way they have implemented DevOps. But at a time when more organizations are moving to centralize the management of DevOps, many of them are evaluating their options, at the very least. The issue, of course, is that multiple DevOps teams within the same organization have committed to disparate platforms. Enticing them to centralize on a common platform will require not just a compelling technical advantage but also a significant amount of political capital.